June 28, 2004
Center for American Unity Press Release on Hamdi Case
Hamdi v.
Rumsfeld decision released
today
YASER HAMDI CALLED A “PRESUMED
AMERICAN CITIZEN” BY JUSTICES SCALIA AND STEVENS
WASHINGTON, D.C.
-- As the Supreme Court released its opinion in the
controversial case of
Hamdi v. Rumsfeld today, the Center for
American Unity called it “small step forward and a
missed opportunity.”
The Hamdi v.
Rumsfeld case is centered around a Saudi Arabian man
who was captured on a battlefield in Afghanistan. He is
claiming all rights of citizenship because his Saudi
parents lived here briefly when he was born.
“Today
Justices Stevens and Scalia – generally on
opposite ideological poles – used the term
‘presumed American citizen’ to describe Yaser Hamdi, who
has sued the government for holding him in a Navy brig
for two years,” said Peter
Brimelow, President of the Center for American Unity.
“Hamdi claims to be a U.S. citizen, but as the Center
for American Unity demonstrated in a
friend of the court brief, Hamdi should not be
recognized as a citizen under the Fourteenth Amendment’s
‘Birthright Citizenship Clause.’”
Peter Brimelow’s
Center for American Unity filed a friend of the court
brief explaining that “drive-by citizenship” or “birthright
citizenship” is not the
original intention of the
framers of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Fourteenth
Amendment requires that a “birthright” citizen be
subject to the jurisdiction of the United States which
means having an allegiance to this country.
“Our brief in
the Hamdi case explained to the Court how
unconstitutional and unreasonable the automatic
citizenship rule is and how that rule damages the United
States,” Brimelow continued. “While the Court did not
choose to define the terms of citizenship in the opinion
released today, which is a missed opportunity, they used
the term "presumed American citizen," which shows that
the Justices are aware of the issue."
"We will
continue to raise this issue at every opportunity - - it
is of
vital importance to the future of the United States.
“United
States citizenship requires more than the accident of
being born on U.S. soil - - an allegiance to the United
States is necessary,”
Brimelow said. “The European Union countries -- and
Mexico -- do not automatically grant citizenship to
babies of tourists or those with temporary visas.
“The Court’s
opinion comes at a time when the one European country
permitting ‘birthright’ citizenship ended it. Earlier
this month Irish voters overwhelmingly approved a plan
to do away with birthright citizenship in that country,”
Brimelow said.[ The
amicus brief can be read at
www.cfau.org.]